The UN in Geneva questions the UK government on its commitment to disabled people. We speak to two people who followed the proceedings - disability reporter Rachel Charlton-Dailey and Rensa Gaunt from Inclusion London, which campaigns for equality for deaf and disabled people.
Actress and broadcaster Madison Tevlin on challenging assumptions about disabled people - and why having Down’s Syndrome is her least interesting trait.
Plus Don Biswas talks neurodiverse comedy.
The episode was made by Daniel Gordon with Niamh Hughes and Emma Tracey. The editor is Alex Lewis. Recorded and mixed by Dave O’Neill.
To get in touch with the team email accessall@bbc.co..uk or find us on X, @bbcaccessall. Don’t forget to subscribe by finding us on BBC Sounds.
Walking on stumps
Love, sex and cotton buds
"I love a bit of shock value"
'Me before euthanasia'
'My wheelchair makes me a human'
Training to use a guide dog isn't always a walk in the park
'What's for dinner?'
Access all areas
Hairy situations
Would you ditch your disability given the chance?
Would you buy chocolate if its label warned you how much exercise you'd need to burn it off?
10th anniversary show
Tales from the train
Vegetable, vegetable or vegetable?
Sex and money
On this special day
Fiction containing disabled characters - do you embrace them, or 'read 'em and weep'?
Your disability anniversary
'Charging the battery': coping with a disability and a mental illness
... like an LGBT for disability
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